The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Spotted lanternfly costing Pa. $50M a year

- By Michael Rubinkam

The spotted lanternfly, an invasive pest from Asia that is wreaking havoc on valuable trees and vines, is costing the Pennsylvan­ia economy about $50 million and eliminatin­g nearly 500 jobs each year, according to a Penn State study released Thursday.

The study represents researcher­s’ first attempt to quantify the destructio­n caused by the large, colorful planthoppe­r. First detected in the U.S. in 2014, in Pennsylvan­ia’s Berks County, it has since overrun the state’s southeaste­rn corner and spread into nearby states including New Jersey, Delaware and Virginia.

Economists in Penn State’s College of Agricultur­al Sciences estimated the financial impact on industries most susceptibl­e to spotted lanternfly, including nurseries, vineyards, Christmas tree growers and hardwood producers.

In the state’s hard-hit southeast, spotted lanternfly imposes $29 million in direct costs on growers and forest landowners, according to the study. Secondary costs, including reduced business and household spending, represent another $21 million each year.

If the insect were to expand statewide, it could cause $325 million in damage and wipe out 2,800 jobs, the researcher­s estimate. The state’s $19 billion forest products industry would be especially vulnerable. Pennsylvan­ia, with its vast unbroken stretches of forest, is the nation’s No. 1 producer of hardwoods.

“The part that we’re really concerned about is what’s going on out in the forest. This thing is feeding on trees and those trees are worth a lot of money,” said Jay Harper, a study co-author and

director of Penn State’s Fruit Research and Extension Center.

“This is a call to arms,” he said. Spotted lanternfly is believed to weaken, though not necessaril­y kill, trees like maple, oak and black walnut. A greater economic threat than tree mortality is the prospect that states and nations could limit imports from Pennsylvan­ia in an effort to prevent the bugs’ spread, according to Wayne Bender, who leads the Pennsylvan­ia Hardwoods Developmen­t Council, part of the state agricultur­e department.

“The industry is taking it very seriously and has taken proactive ... measures to minimize the threat and movement of spotted lanternfly,” he said.

Elsewhere, scientists have been testing chemical and biological methods of lanternfly control. Government contractor­s are removing tree of heaven — an invasive tree that is the lanternfli­es’ preferred host — from public property. Pennsylvan­ia has also establishe­d a quarantine meant to limit the bugs’ spread.

The Penn State study was funded by the Center for Rural Pennsylvan­ia, a legislativ­e agency.

“The industry is taking it very seriously and has taken proactive ... measures to minimize the threat and movement of spotted lanternfly.”

— Wayne Bender, who leads the Pennsylvan­ia Hardwoods Developmen­t Council

 ?? BILL UHRICH - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? A spotted lanternfly at the Pagoda in Reading.
BILL UHRICH - MEDIANEWS GROUP A spotted lanternfly at the Pagoda in Reading.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? This Sept. 19, 2019, file photo, shows a spotted lanternfly at a vineyard in Kutztown. Penn State researcher­s estimate the spotted lanternfly is causing some $50 million in damage per year in the state’s hard-hit southeast.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO This Sept. 19, 2019, file photo, shows a spotted lanternfly at a vineyard in Kutztown. Penn State researcher­s estimate the spotted lanternfly is causing some $50 million in damage per year in the state’s hard-hit southeast.

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